Đề ôn thi tốt nghiệp Trung học Phổ thông môn Tiếng Anh - Năm học 2017-2018 - Mã đề 295

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Đề ôn thi tốt nghiệp Trung học Phổ thông môn Tiếng Anh - Năm học 2017-2018 - Mã đề 295
SỞ GIÁO DỤC ĐÀO TẠO ÔN THI TỐT NGHIỆP TRUNG HỌC PHỔ THÔNG 
 ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC NĂM HỌC 2017- 2018
 (Đề gồm có 04 trang) MÔN TIẾNG ANH ~ MÃ ĐỀ 295
 Thời gian: 60 phút - không tính thời gian giao đề
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of primary stress in each of the following questions.
 Question 1:A. proverbial	B. photography	C. magnicicent	D. advantageous
 Question 2:A. contaminate	B. consultancy	C. architecture	D. chronology
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 3: Our lew house is very........for the office as I can get there in five minutes.
A. available	B. convenient	C. comfortable	D. suitable
Question 4: Children can be difficult to teach because of their short attention.........
A. duration	B. limit	C. span	D. time
Question 5: The new regime determined to........compulsory military service.
A. break off	B. phase out	C. end up	D. stop off
Question 6: As the managing director dictating the letter, his secretary......what he wassaying in shorthand.
A. took up	B. took down	C. took on	D. took off
Question 7: Technology is advancing so quickly that machines becomes.....almost overnight.
A. stale	B. obsolete	C. archaic	D. second-hand
Question 8: You can........me the details; I don’t want to know all about your arguments with your boss.
A. deprive	B. avoid.	C. save	D. spare
Question 9: The group’s image......to young people in general and the less well-off in particular.
A. draws	B. attracts	C. appeals	D. excites
Question 10: This new law will take.....from the beginning of next month.
A. influence	B. effect	C. force	D. power
Question 11: This jacket would be ideal in winter: it has a fur......
A. lining	B. backing	C. coating	D. filling
Question 12: If you bathe your finger in cold water, that should......the pain.
A. blunt	B. curb	C. deaden	D. restrain
Question 13: She wanted a cake, ........one with chocolate.
A. preferable	B. preferably	C. preferentially	D. preferential
Question 14: This new advertising campaign is not........with our company policy.
A. suited	B. matched	C. consistent	D. allied
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word whose underlined part differs from the other three in pronunciation in each of the following questions.
 Question 15:A. private	B. literate	C. considerate	D. illustrate
 Question 16:A. predict	B. verdict	C. interdict	D. indictment
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 17: She arrived ten minutes before her flight, so she was cutting it a bit fine. 
A. having little time	B. almost late	C. just in time	D. getting hurt
Question 18: The headmaster is forever extolling the virtues of her children. 
A. appreciate	B. praise	C. criticize	D. validate
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 19: A stay in the country will be beneficial to his health. 
A. vulnerable	B. good	C. detrimental	D. useful
Question 20: Her latest book is readable enough, but it can't hold a candle to her earlier work. 
A. surpass	B. overcome	C. conquer	D. charge higher
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 21: Superior to all others woods for shipbuilding, teak is also used for furniture, flooring, and general construction.
A. others	B. furniture	C. used for	D. for
Question 22: A calorie is the quantity of heat required to rise one gallon of water one degree centigrade at one atmospheric pressure.
A. A calorie	B. to rise	C. quantity	D. required
Question 23: The diametre of the Sun is more than one hundred times greater than the Earth.
A. times	B. more than	C. greater 	D. the
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best completes each of the following exchanges.
Question 24: ~ A: “.................” ~ B: “Please hold the line. I’ll just put you through.”
A. This is Doris Evans. I’d like to speak to Mr. Davidson, please.
B. Help me out, please. My dress’s got stuck to the hook..
C. Oh, no. My kite’s broken away.
D. Take this message for him, please.
Question 25: ~ A: “ That’s $ 8.50, sir.” ~ B: “.................”
A. The bill, please.	B. I’ll eat à la carte.	C. I’ll pay back soon.	D. Here you are.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 26 to 33.
 For 150 years scientists have tried to determine the solar constant, the amount of solar energy that reaches the Earth. Yet, even in the most cloud-free regions of the planet, the solar constant cannot he measured precisely. Gas molecules and dust particles in the atmosphere absorb and scatter sunlight and prevent some wave lengths of the light from ever reaching the ground.
 With the advent of satellites, however, scientists have finally been able to measure the Sun’s output without being impeded by the Earth's atmosphere. Solar Max, a satellite from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), has been measuring the Sun's output since February 1980. Although a malfunction in the satellite's control system limited its observation for a few years, the satellie was repaired in orbit by astronauts from the space shuttle in 1984. Max's observations indicate that the solar constant is not really constant after all.
 The satellite’s instruments have detected frequent, small variations in the Sun’s energy output, generally amounting to no more than 0.05 percent of the Sun's nnean energy output and lasting from a few days to a few weeks. Scientists believe these fluctuations coincide with the appearance and disappearance of large group's of sunspots on the Sun's disk. Sunspots are relatively dark regions on the Sun's surface that have strong magnetic fields and a temperature about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than the rest of the Sun's surface. Particularly large fluctuations in the solar constant have coincided with sightings of large sunspot groups. In 1980, for exannple, Solar Max's instrument, registered a 0.3 percent drop in the solar energy reachng the Earth. At that time a sunspot group covered about 0.6 percent of the solar disk, in area 20 times larger than the Earth’s surface.
 Long-term variations in the solar constant are more difficult to deternnine. Although Solar Max's data have indicated a slow and steady decline in the Sun's output, some scientists have thought that the satellite's aging detectors might have become less sensitive over the years, thus falsely indicating a drop in the solar constant. This possibility was dismissed, however, by comparing Solar Max's observations with data from a similar instrument operating on NASA's Nimbus 7 weather satellite since 1978.
Question 26: Why did scientists think that Solar Max might be giving unreliable information?
A. Nimbus 7 interfered with Solar Max's detectors
B. Solar Max's instruments were getting old.
C. Solar Max did not work for the first few years.
D. The space shuttle could not fix Solar Max's instruments
Question 27: The word "scatter" in line 3 is closest in meaning to.......
A. capture	B. transform	C. hit	D. disperse
Question 28: What does this passage mainly discuss?
A. The launching of a weather satellite	B. The measurement of variations in the solar constant
C. The components of the Earth’s atmosphere	D. The interaction of sunlight and air pollution
Question 29: The phrase "This possibility" in the last paragraph refers to the likelihood that the........
A. solar constant cannot be measured	B. instruments are providing inaccurate data
C. Nimbus 7 satellite is older than Solar Max	D. solar constant has declined
Question 30: The word "detected" in the third paragraph is closest in meaning to.......
A. estimated	B. predicted	C. disregarded	D. registered
Question 31: According to the passage, scientists believd variations in the solar constant are related to.......
A. unusual weather patterns	B. fluctuations in the Earth's temperature
C. increased levels of dust	D. sunspot activity
Question 32: Why is it not possible to measure the solar constant accurately without a satellite?
A. Some areas on Earth receive more solar energy than others.
B. There is not enough sunlight during the day.
C. The Earth is too far from the Sun.
D. The Earth's atmosphere interferes with the sunlight.
Question 33: The word "its’ in the second paragraph refers to the.......
A. malfunction	B. atmosphere	C. satellite	D. orbit
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 34 to 00.
 Memory is a vital characteristic of the human species. Organisms evolve to adapt to their environments in many different ways. There are, however, two broad classes of adaptation. The first of these involves pre-programming the organism to cope with its environment so that it is born with all the necessary instincts and equipment to operate efficiently and effectively with virtually no learning, this is clearly a very successful means of adaptation and has enabled an enormous range of organisms, from plants, bacteria, and insects to "simple" vertebrates, to continue to flourish for millions of years. Such organisms have their mode of adaptation "wired in" and, as such, have minimal need for learning or memory.
 The second involves the production of an organism which is adaptable. Here, there is much less pre-programming, and the organism is left to modify its behaviour in response to its environment. This allows for considerably greater complexity and variability of behaviour. It also demands a larger brain and is heavily dependent on the capacity to leam and remember. The human race is the obvious example of this form of evolution - our ability to leam and remember has allowed us to develop tools and language, technologies which in turn vastly increased our ability to store and communicate yet more information through writing, and subsequently films, videos, and computers, all of which can be regarded as an extension of the memory. However, without the individual's memory, the vast storage of information in the libraries all over the world would be incomprehensible.
 Accordingly, the ability to learn and remember, allowing as it does for the development of language, is perhaps our most crucial characteristic.
Question 34: According to the passage, many organisms have existed for millions of years because they......
A. continually adapt to the environment.	B. have inbuilt resources.
C. are unable to learn.	D. have no memory.
Question 35: It can be inferred from the passage that man's most important characteristic is......
 A. the capacity to remember.	 B. an aptitude for writing.
C. the skill of storing information.	D. the ability to speak.
Question 36: According to the passage, the organism of the second class.....
A. relies upon its memory.	B. changes the behavior constantly.
C. learns very quickly.	D. modifies the environment.
Question 37: Which phrase below is the closest in meaning to “to cope with”?
A. compete	B. deal with	C. overcome	D. adapt to
Question 38: The author suggests that a human being's memory is......
A. supported by technological advances.	B. dependent upon the storage of writing.
C. a tool used for understanding.	D. partly responsible for the growth of the language.
Question 39: The author mentions all of the following in connection with the first class of adaptation EXCEPT.....
A. Process of being wired into equipment.	B. State of being programmed in advance.
C. Ability to deal with the environment.	D. Possession of the requisite instincts.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase that best fits each of the numbered blanks from 40 to 45.
 If you go to the website of London’s Royal Court Theatre, you’ll find a paragraph headed “Trigger Warnings”, advising that some plays ...(40)... material “that can be particularly distressing for some individuals”. If you’re an author who thinks your new book may ...(41)... offence, you can get a “sensitivity reader” to vet it. We now spend a lot of time agonising over people’s feelings, says David Aaronovitch. Hardly a day ...(42)... by without someone trying to ban something: students at a US university have just banned the “alt-right” provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos from giving a talk, fearing he’d create an “unsafe space” for people on campus. Such moves, however well-intentioned, are ...(43)... on the flawed assumption that people are so fragile they must be ()from things that may upset them. Wrong. As the eminent psychiatrist Sir Simon Wessely discovered after the 7/7 London bombings, the counselling given to the survivors actually made many feel worse. “People are tougher than we think,” and it is by ...(44)... up to our fears that we overcome them. Instead of searching out sources of offence, we must trust in people’s adaptability and resilience.
[Adapted from The TIMES, February, 2017]
 Question 40:A. give	B. form	C. contain	D. integrate
 Question 41:A. get	B. bring	C. kindle	D. cause
 Question 42:A. goes	B. passes	C. crosses	D. stops
 Question 43:A. concentrated	B. depended	C. based	D. laid
 Question 44:A. clodes	B. excluded	C. banned	D. shielded
 Question 45:A. kicking	B. looking	C. turning	D. facing
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
Question 46: Friendly though he may seem, he's not to be trusted.
A. He may have friends, but he‘s not to be trusted.
B. However he seems friendly, he‘s not to be trusted.
C. He‘s too friendly to be trusted.
D. However friendly he seems, he‘s not to be trusted.
Question 47: I haven't enjoyed myself so much for years.
A. It’s years since I enjoyed myself so much.
B. It’s years since I have enjoyed myself so much.
C. It was years since I had enjoyed myself so much.
D. It has been years since I have enjoyed myself so much.
Question 48: Were it not for the money, this job wouldn't be worthwhile.
A. Although the salary is poor, the job is worthwhile.
B. The only thing that makes this job worthwhile is the money.
C. This job offers a poor salary.
D. This job is not rewarding at all.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.
Question 49: The plane crash killed a lot of people. Dad was as sound as the bell.
A. The plane crash killed a lot of people, but Dad was as sound as the bell.
B. Despite the plane crash killed a lot of people, Dad was as sound as the bell.
C. No matter many people were killed in the plane crash, Dad was as sound as the bell.
D. The plane crash killed a lot of people and Dad was as sound as the bell.
Question 50: She looks a lady of 60. She is only 30 years of age.
A. A lady of 60 looks for her age for 30 years.
B. Her look is older than her age.
C. She looks a lady of 60, but her real age is only 30.
D. A lady of 60 looks 30 years younger than her. 
The End
SỞ GIÁO DỤC ĐÀO TẠO ÔN THI TỐT NGHIỆP TRUNG HỌC PHỔ THÔNG 
 ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC NĂM HỌC 2017- 2018
 (Đề gồm có 04 trang) MÔN TIẾNG ANH ~ MÃ ĐỀ 795
 Thời gian: 60 phút - không tính thời gian giao đề
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best combines each pair of sentences in the following questions.
Question 1: She looks a lady of 60. She is only 30 years of age.
A. Her look is older than her age.
B. A lady of 60 looks for her age for 30 years.
C. A lady of 60 looks 30 years younger than her. 
D. She looks a lady of 60, but her real age is only 30.
Question 2: The plane crash killed a lot of people. Dad was as sound as the bell.
A. Despite the plane crash killed a lot of people, Dad was as sound as the bell.
B. The plane crash killed a lot of people, but Dad was as sound as the bell.
C. The plane crash killed a lot of people and Dad was as sound as the bell.
D. No matter many people were killed in the plane crash, Dad was as sound as the bell.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) CLOSEST in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 3: She arrived ten minutes before her flight, so she was cutting it a bit fine. 
A. just in time	B. almost late	C. having little time	D. getting hurt
Question 4: The headmaster is forever extolling the virtues of her children. 
A. appreciate	B. validate	C. criticize	D. praise
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
Question 5: Children can be difficult to teach because of their short attention.........
A. span	B. time	C. duration	D. limit
Question 6: She wanted a cake, ........one with chocolate.
A. preferential	B. preferentially	C. preferable	D. preferably
Question 7: As the managing director dictating the letter, his secretary......what he wassaying in shorthand.
A. took on	B. took off	C. took down	D. took up
Question 8: You can........me the details; I don’t want to know all about your arguments with your boss.
A. save	B. spare	C. deprive	D. avoid.
Question 9: The new regime determined to........compulsory military service.
A. stop off	B. phase out	C. break off	D. end up
Question 10: This jacket would be ideal in winter: it has a fur......
A. backing	B. coating	C. filling	D. lining
Question 11: This new advertising campaign is not........with our company policy.
A. consistent	B. allied	C. matched	D. suited
Question 12: The group’s image......to young people in general and the less well-off in particular.
A. attracts	B. draws	C. appeals	D. excites
Question 13: Technology is advancing so quickly that machines becomes.....almost overnight.
A. second-hand	B. obsolete	C. archaic	D. stale
Question 14: Our lew house is very........for the office as I can get there in five minutes.
A. suitable	B. convenient	C. available	D. comfortable
Question 15: If you bathe your finger in cold water, that should......the pain.
A. blunt	B. curb	C. restrain	D. deaden
Question 16: This new law will take.....from the beginning of next month.
A. force	B. power	C. effect	D. influence
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 17 to 22.
 Memory is a vital characteristic of the human species. Organisms evolve to adapt to their environments in many different ways. There are, however, two broad classes of adaptation. The first of these involves pre-programming the organism to cope with its environment so that it is born with all the necessary instincts and equipment to operate efficiently and effectively with virtually no learning, this is clearly a very successful means of adaptation and has enabled an enormous range of organisms, from plants, bacteria, and insects to "simple" vertebrates, to continue to flourish for millions of years. Such organisms have their mode of adaptation "wired in" and, as such, have minimal need for learning or memory.
 The second involves the production of an organism which is adaptable. Here, there is much less pre-programming, and the organism is left to modify its behaviour in response to its environment. This allows for considerably greater complexity and variability of behaviour. It also demands a larger brain and is heavily dependent on the capacity to leam and remember. The human race is the obvious example of this form of evolution - our ability to leam and remember has allowed us to develop tools and language, technologies which in turn vastly increased our ability to store and communicate yet more information through writing, and subsequently films, videos, and computers, all of which can be regarded as an extension of the memory. However, without the individual's memory, the vast storage of information in the libraries all over the world would be incomprehensible.
 Accordingly, the ability to learn and remember, allowing as it does for the development of language, is perhaps our most crucial characteristic.
Question 17: According to the passage, the organism of the second class.....
A. relies upon its memory.	B. changes the behavior constantly.
C. modifies the environment.	D. learns very quickly.
Question 18: The author suggests that a human being's memory is......
A. supported by technological advances.	B. partly responsible for the growth of the language.
C. dependent upon the storage of writing.	D. a tool used for understanding.
Question 19: Which phrase below is the closest in meaning to “to cope with”?
A. overcome	B. compete	C. adapt to	D. deal with
Question 20: The author mentions all of the following in connection with the first class of adaptation EXCEPT.....
A. Process of being wired into equipment.	B. State of being programmed in advance.
C. Possession of the requisite instincts.	D. Ability to deal with the environment.
Question 21: According to the passage, many organisms have existed for millions of years because they......
A. have inbuilt resources.	B. have no memory.
C. are unable to learn.	D. continually adapt to the environment.
Question 22: It can be inferred from the passage that man's most important characteristic is......
 A. an aptitude for writing. B. the capacity to remember.
C. the ability to speak.	D. the skill of storing information.
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word that differs from the other three in the position of primary stress in each of the following questions.
 Question 23:A. architecture	 B. chronology	C. consultancy	D. contaminate
 Question 24:A. photography B. proverbial	C. magnicicent	D. advantageous
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that best completes each of the following exchanges.
Question 25: ~ A: “ That’s $ 8.50, sir.” ~ B: “.................”
A. The bill, please.	B. Here you are.	C. I’ll eat à la carte.	D. I’ll pay back soon.
Question 26: ~ A: “.................” ~ B: “Please hold the line. I’ll just put you through.”
A. Help me out, please. My dress’s got stuck to the hook..
B. Oh, no. My kite’s broken away.
C. This is Doris Evans. I’d like to speak to Mr. Davidson, please.
D. Take this message for him, please.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct word or phrase that best fits each of the numbered blanks from 27 to 32.
 If you go to the website of London’s Royal Court Theatre, you’ll find a paragraph headed “Trigger Warnings”, advising that some plays ...(27)... material “that can be particularly distressing for some individuals”. If you’re an author who thinks your new book may ...(28)... offence, you can get a “sensitivity reader” to vet it. We now spend a lot of time agonising over people’s feelings, says David Aaronovitch. Hardly a day ...(29)... by without someone trying to ban something: students at a US university have just banned the “alt-right” provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos from giving a talk, fearing he’d create an “unsafe space” for people on campus. Such moves, however well-intentioned, are ...(30)... on the flawed assumption that people are so fragile they must be ()from things that may upset them. Wrong. As the eminent psychiatrist Sir Simon Wessely discovered after the 7/7 London bombings, the counselling given to the survivors actually made many feel worse. “People are tougher than we think,” and it is by ...(31)... up to our fears that we overcome them. Instead of searching out sources of offence, we must trust in people’s adaptability and resilience.
[Adapted from The TIMES, February, 2017]
 Question 27:A. contain	B. integrate	C. give	D. form
 Question 28:A. get	B. cause	C. bring	D. kindle
 Question 29:A. passes	B. stops	C. goes	D. crosses
 Question 30:A. depended	B. laid	C. based	D. concentrated
 Question 31:A. shielded	B. clodes	C. excluded	D. banned
 Question 32:A. turning	B. kicking	C. facing	D. looking
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 33 to 40.
 For 150 years scientists have tried to determine the solar constant, the amount of solar energy that reaches the Earth. Yet, even in the most cloud-free regions of the planet, the solar constant cannot he measured precisely. Gas molecules and dust particles in the atmosphere absorb and scatter sunlight and prevent some wave lengths of the light from ever reaching the ground.
 With the advent of satellites, however, scientists have finally been able to measure the Sun’s output without being impeded by the Earth's atmosphere. Solar Max, a satellite from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), has been measuring the Sun's output since February 1980. Although a malfunction in the satellite's control system limited its observation for a few years, the satellie was repaired in orbit by astronauts from the space shuttle in 1984. Max's observations indicate that the solar constant is not really constant after all.
 The satellite’s instruments have detected frequent, small variations in the Sun’s energy output, generally amounting to no more than 0.05 percent of the Sun's nnean energy output and lasting from a few days to a few weeks. Scientists believe these fluctuations coincide with the appearance and disappearance of large group's of sunspots on the Sun's disk. Sunspots are relatively dark regions on the Sun's surface that have strong magnetic fields and a temperature about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than the rest of the Sun's surface. Particularly large fluctuations in the solar constant have coincided with sightings of large sunspot groups. In 1980, for exannple, Solar Max's instrument, registered a 0.3 percent drop in the solar energy reachng the Earth. At that time a sunspot group covered about 0.6 percent of the solar disk, in area 20 times larger than the Earth’s surface.
 Long-term variations in the solar constant are more difficult to deternnine. Although Solar Max's data have indicated a slow and steady decline in the Sun's output, some scientists have thought that the satellite's aging detectors might have become less sensitive over the years, thus falsely indicating a drop in the solar constant. This possibility was dismissed, however, by comparing Solar Max's observations with data from a similar instrument operating on NASA's Nimbus 7 weather satellite since 1978.
Question 33: According to the passage, scientists believd variations in the solar constant are related to.......
A. fluctuations in the Earth's temperature	B. increased levels of dust
C. sunspot activity	D. unusual weather patterns
Question 34: The word "scatter" in line 3 is closest in meaning to.......
A. capture	B. hit	C. disperse	D. transform
Question 35: The word "its’ in the second paragraph refers to the.......
A. satellite	B. orbit	C. atmosphere	D. malfunction
Question 36: What does this passage mainly discuss?
A. The interaction of sunlight and air pollution	B. The measurement of variations in the solar constant
C. The components of the Earth’s atmosphere	D. The launching of a weather satellite
Question 37: The word "detected" in the third paragraph is closest in meaning to.......
A. predicted	B. disregarded	C. registered	D. estimated
Question 38: Why is it not possible to measure the solar constant accurately without a satellite?
A. There is not enough sunlight during the day.
B. The Earth is too far from the Sun.
C. The Earth's atmosphere interferes with the sunlight.
D. Some areas on Earth receive more solar energy than others.
Question 39: Why did scientists think that Solar Max might be giving unreliable information?
A. The space shuttle could not fix Solar Max's instruments
B. Nimbus 7 interfered with Solar Max's detectors
C. Solar Max did not work for the first few years.
D. Solar Max's instruments were getting old.
Question 40: The phrase "This possibility" in the last paragraph refers to the likelihood that the........
A. instruments are providing inaccurate data	B. solar constant has declined
C. solar constant cannot be measured	D. Nimbus 7 satellite is older than Solar Max
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
Question 41: Her latest book is readable enough, but it can't hold a candle to her earlier work. 
A. conquer	B. charge higher	C. surpass	D. overcome
Question 42: A stay in the country will be beneficial to his health. 
A. detrimental	B. useful	C. good	D. vulnerable
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the underlined part that needs correction in each of the following questions.
Question 43: The diametre of the Sun is more than one hundred times greater than the Earth.
A. the	B. more than	C. times	D. greater 
Question 44: A calorie is the quantity of heat required to rise one gallon of water one degree centigrade at one atmospheric pressure.
A. quantity	B. A calorie	C. required	D. to rise
Question 45: Superior to all others woods for shipbuilding, teak is also used for furniture, flooring, and general construction.
A. used for	B. furniture	C. for	D. others
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.

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